Week 2 - Practicing Passages // May 10
Hello and welcome to the Main Thread for Week 2 of the virtuosity challenge! This is the place to discuss the Week 2 stream and post your Week 2 practice updates.
- Make sure you've read the guidelines before replying (<- click)
- Watch the Week 2 livestream here for help with this week's exercises!
Download the sheet music: in this second week, we will be working with different excerpts from my right-hand technique workshop, as well as some new materials.
Download them both here:
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Right-hand exercise book (<- click)
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Download additional sheet music here (now with fingerings!)
Video updates are encouraged due to the technical aspect of this challenge Feel free to upload videos into your replies OR simply link to YouTube. YouTube video submissions CAN be unlisted. Just make sure they're not set on "private", so we can all see them.
If you want to describe your process, feel free to use the following template.
- Exercise(s) you have been working on:
- Things you found easy:
- Things you found difficult:
↓ Reply below with your submissions and questions! ↓
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Exercises we will be looking at today from the original right-hand exercise book are:
- 6A, 6B, 7A, 7B, 8B, 8C, 9B
We will also be looking at the additional sheet music that is provided as a separate download above! (or by clicking here)
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Update for the Paganini excerpt:
Gosh, I realize this wasn't clear from the way I wrote my fingering down on the page, but:
The low A at the end of every scale can be played as a rest-stroke note with i, rather than as part of the arpeggio following it.
You can then wait on the low A as long as you need - enough to have time to get your hand in position for the next arpeggio (preparing all fingers on the strings, just like most of you are doing.)
I did demonstrate this, but I didn't explicitly spell out that the low A was supposed to be the last note of the scale in the fingerings I uploaded.
The fingerings in the excerpt are correct - they just don't specify a finger for you on that note.
I thought it was self-evident, but I was biased as someone who's played this piece for many years. I apologize for that!
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Hi, Mircea: I´ve just finished writing this in last week´s thread, but maybe my questions are more connected to today´s livestream. BTW, I´ll be late. (Work).
As for escales: when you go from high to low notes, do you prepare all the fingers in the left hand, Tamayo style? My hand tenses a lot when doing this.
Also, you once told in a livestream that, studying with Clerch, there was a time when you at last got to the speed you wanted, like reaching a long desired goal. Did you get there using these exercises?
Now: this week I´ve been memorising two pieces in order to implement your ideas. Villalobos etude 3 and "El colibrí" (Sagreras). Now that every note and every finger are clear, my question is: how do you take to concert level the pieces that ask for speed and endurance (playing fast the whole time)? I ask this as opposed to pieces in wich you have some difficult passages that you can isolate, wich I think you´ll explain today. THANK YOU!
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Update: Just updated the additional practice materials with the fingerings from today's livestream! See the link above or click here.
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I confess that I was more than a little lost while watching yesterday's live-stream (I watched it later so I could not ask questions). I think I'm just going to try a few arpeggio exercises with planting, and a couple scalar rest-stroke exercises. I feel a bit like a small child who is being thrown into the deep end of the pool!
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Hi, this is my recording of my practise session today on Thursday of Capriccio no.5. I'm gradually beginning to remember the notes. I've never played this before so it still feels uncertain/uncomfortable after a few days.
Lots of mistakes I'm sure but I thought it would be good to see what I'm doing now and I'll record again on Sunday to see if I've made progress.
I noticed that my slurs were rubbish so I'll work on that. I'm also doing the descending scale in different shapes to Mircea but I still use thew open E to help my position shift.
Regards Dennis